1. Factors Related to Establishing a Comfort Care Goal in Nursing Home Patients with Dementia: A Cohort Study among Family and Professional Caregivers.
- Author
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van Soest-Poortvliet, Mirjam C., van der Steen, Jenny T., de Vet, Henrica C.W., Hertogh, Cees M.P.M., Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Bregje D., and Deliens, Luc H.J.
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DEMENTIA ,FAMILIES ,GOAL (Psychology) ,HUMAN comfort ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL protocols ,NURSING home residents ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RELIGION ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Many people with dementia die in long-term care settings. These patients may benefit from a palliative care goal, focused on comfort. Admission may be a good time to revisit or develop care plans. Objective: To describe care goals in nursing home patients with dementia and factors associated with establishing a comfort care goal. Design: We used generalized estimating equation regression analyses for baseline analyses and multinomial logistic regression analyses for longitudinal analyses. Setting: Prospective data collection in 28 Dutch facilities, mostly nursing homes (2007-2010; Dutch End of Life in Dementia study, DEOLD). Results: Eight weeks after admission (baseline), 56.7% of 326 patients had a comfort care goal. At death, 89.5% had a comfort care goal. Adjusted for illness severity, patients with a baseline comfort care goal were more likely to have a religious affiliation, to be less competent to make decisions, and to have a short survival prediction. Their families were less likely to prefer life-prolongation and more likely to be satisfied with family-physician communication. Compared with patients with a comfort care goal established later during their stay, patients with a baseline comfort care goal also more frequently had a more highly educated family member. Conclusions: Initially, over half of the patients had a care goal focused on comfort, increasing to the large majority of the patients at death. Optimizing patient-family-physician communication upon admission may support the early establishing of a comfort care goal. Patient condition and family views play a role, and physicians should be aware that religious affiliation and education may also affect the (timing of) setting a comfort care goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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